James leads Heat to 11th win in row

He must have really, really loved it Friday night - even with a deafening chorus of boos ringing in his ears.

James delivered another vintage performance at Madison Square Garden, scoring 32 points and finishing with his 30th career triple-double to help the Miami Heat beat the New York Knicks, 113-91, for their 11th straight victory.

James had 11 rebounds and 10 assists, silencing a star-studded crowd that once cheered him lustily - in fact, he was always an MSG favorite - but jeered him this time because he snubbed the Knicks in free agency.

The frostiness didn't seem to faze him, certainly not his game.

"This is a great building," James said. "Myself and D-Wade talk about it all the time. Certain buildings in this league that you just thrive on and you're excited about, and this being the Mecca of basketball as a kid you always envision not only playing in the NBA but also having a chance to play in Madison Square Garden."

Though it was hardly a warm welcome, James' first visit in more than a year was heralded by nonstop hype on TV and in the tabs and was a must-see for celebrity fans including Spike Lee, Woody Allen, Liam Neeson and Tracy Morgan.

What they saw was the league's MVP toying with a Knicks team hoping to prove it belonged with the big boys but was, instead, overwhelmed by his brilliance.

James is the active scoring leader in the arena with 30.5 points per game, the only visiting player besides Michael Jordan with multiple 50-point games.

New York's Amare Stoudemire was limited to 24 points on 11-of-28 shooting, snapping his franchise-record streak of nine straight 30-point games. He grabbed 14 rebounds, and Danilo Gallinari scored 25 points, but the Knicks lost their second straight after an eight-game winning streak.

"We understand we're not far away but we still have to improve and get better," Stoudemire said. "I think playing these guys is a learning lesson for us. We've got to learn from these games and get better."

Shaking off some brief pain after his foot got stuck under the New York bench - the second Miami athlete to get tripped up along a New York sideline this week - James led a 27-7 run in the third quarter that turned a small Knicks lead into an 18-point Miami advantage.

Once a bitter rivalry fueled by postseason punches, it was reborn this season in the transaction page. Miami wrecked New York's hopes of rebuilding through free agency by signing James, Wade and Bosh, widely regarded as the three best players available. The Knicks did land Stoudemire, and he's been superb, but the Heat defended him well and got more than enough offense from the Big Three.

The Knicks rang up 116 points in a two-point loss to Boston on Wednesday night, but Miami shut them down in the second half and many fans had already departed by the time Miami's trio of stars called it a night.

"Their defense in the second half was good. I think it was a combination of everything," Knicks coach Mike D'Antoni said.

"I thought the first half was great. But then we started the second half and we're missing foul shots and we're missing shots we thought we would get in. I think it deflated us a little bit. Instead of getting energized we just lost it a little bit."

The boos started during the national anthem for the player who once drew louder ovations than anyone on the home team. New Yorkers wanted him, but the spin here now is that James just wasn't up for accepting the challenge of trying to rebuild the Knicks - the challenge that Stoudemire took on.

James denied the lights of New York were too bright for him.

"It's not a spotlight that I can't handle," he said before the game. "It's not a situation that I can't handle."

Nor could the Knicks handle him.

The Knicks led by two early in the third quarter before James nailed a 3-pointer that gave Miami the lead for good and kicked off his 14-point period. He scored the Heat's final eight points, slapping five with a fan after hitting another long jumper.

Wade said earlier Friday he didn't think the Knicks really wanted him, and team management talked to Bosh but is convinced it got the best power forward available when it signed Stoudemire. So do Knicks fans, who chanted "Overrated!" as Bosh shot free throws midway through the first half.

"I loved it. It was a nice try," Bosh said. "It was some added motivation for me. That makes games fun and it gave me extra incentive to be a little bit more successful tonight."

Bosh outplayed Stoudemire, and with their superstar struggling the Knicks shot just 39 percent from the field.

Wade, Bosh and James were introduced in order during pregame introductions, the jeers growing louder with each. James continued to hear boos each time he touched the ball early on, but he largely quieted the crowd by scoring 14 points in the first quarter, when the Heat shot 65 percent and built a 34-25 lead.

He even drew some oohs and aahs with a nifty behind the back pass to Erick Dampier for a dunk that gave Miami a 13-point lead, and the Heat poised to blow it open with Stoudemire on the bench. But with Gallinari carrying them along with some smart plays by rookie Landry Fields - such a fan favorite that Lee wears his No. 6 jersey he hoped would belong to James - New York surged back to tie it at 57 at halftime.

NOTES: Stoudemire was trying for the NBA's first 10-game streak of 30-point games since James from March 22-April 10 2006. ... Heat forward Mike Miller is close to returning from a season-long absence with a broken right thumb and coach Erik Spoelstra said he considered suiting him up Friday, but wants him to get some practice time first. ... New York's last victory over Miami was in D'Antoni's Knicks debut in the 2008-09 season opener. ... The game was the first to be televised on ESPN 3D.